143 So. 461 | Ala. | 1932
The questions reserved for decision are the overruling of demurrer to the wanton count of the complaint, and the giving and refusing of instructions to the jury. The plea was in short by consent.
It is true that, where the facts are specifically stated, they must support the characterization of such facts as to wantonness. Jackson v. Vaughn,
The gravamen of count 2 was "that all of his (plaintiff's) aforementioned injuries were a proximate consequence of the wantonness of the defendant, its agents, servants or employees, in wantonly causing or allowing said automobile truck to run into, upon or against the plaintiff on the occasion aforementioned." *445
The record proper fails to show a specific ruling on the demurrer, and the sufficiency of the complaint will not be considered on appeal. Yates v. Barnett,
There are several assignments as to portions of the oral charge. It is the rule that general exceptions to the oral charge, without sufficiently indicating the language to which exception is reserved, are insufficient to present that instruction for review. Ex parte Cowart,
The matter of Gen. Acts 1927, p. 370, § 55, and the municipal ordinance are considered in pari materia. When the whole of the charge is considered, the oral instructions were within the rule of our cases. Ivy v. Marx;
Whether or not defendant's refused charge 13 may be refused in its present form, it was substantially covered by given charge (Morgan Hill Paving Co. v. Fonville,
There being evidence, and reasonable tendencies thereof, to prove the averments of the two counts of the complaint, general affirmative instructions are properly refused. McMillan v. Aiken,
The cause was properly submitted to the jury on count 2. The witness Bentley, who was driving the truck, testified that, as he approached the intersection at the rate of from ten to twelve miles (and, according to the witness Bracewell, was going pretty fast, at a "pretty good clip"), he saw the street car, the Ford, and men running to get on the street car; that he did not sound the horn, but holloed when he saw plaintiff emerge from the car. The preponderance of the evidence was that plaintiff was struck on the left side of the street on which the truck was proceeding. The witness Dison fixed the speed of the truck at twelve or fifteen miles per hour, and no witness placed the speed at more than twenty miles per hour; and testimony was to the effect that the truck was stopped within five or six feet.
The witnesses White, plaintiff, Bracewell, and Dison testified that the car from which appellee alighted was parked by and parallel to the curb on the northwest corner of Fiftieth street and Tenth Avenue North, and that it was approximately five feet wide; was parked near the west curb, and the truck passed close to Bracewell's car. The witness White testified that the truck came within about three feet of him; that the left side of appellant's truck was, say, within eight or nine feet of the western curb line of Fiftieth street, and on or near the left side of the street, and the street was from twenty-five to twenty-eight feet wide. Appellant's driver corroborates this testimony to the effect that he was on or about the east edge of the left side of the street. The diagram exhibited shows that the small black square referred to as the position of the truck immediately before it struck plaintiff was at the edge and within the western half of Fiftieth street, or the dividing line thereof. Then, under the driver's testimony, if he saw this car parked over there when he entered the intersection and saw the street car parked on the opposite side of the street, which was starting and stopping, saw people running to points on the street, or from the automobile to the street car, some of whom continued on across the street to the car, and some stopped, and if that driver continued on across the intersection in front of the street car and on his left side of the street at or about the speed he indicated, this would afford a reasonable inference warranting submission on count 2.
As was declared in Allison Coal Transfer Co. v. Davis,
The refusal of charge 7, requested by defendant, is urged as error under section 5948, Code of Birmingham, of which we take judicial knowledge. The trial court indorsed the refusal on the ground that the ordinance did not apply to the act in question. That section was new and was not operative prior to the time that Code became effective, December 1, 1930. The collision was on May 27th of that year, and was within section 1901 of the Code of the City of Birmingham of date of 1917, which contained a limited application of the rule as affecting pedestrians; the restricted areas being between the south side of First avenue, the north side of Fifth avenue, west side of Nineteenth street, and the east side of Twenty-First street. The locus in quo of this injury was on Fiftieth street and north of Tenth avenue, and was not in what is designated as the "Loop Area." There was no error in refusing defendant's charge 7. Moreover, it was bad in form.
We find no reversible error in overruling the motion for a new trial. Cobb v. Malone Collins,
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BROWN and KNIGHT, JJ., concur.